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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Q. Horatius Flaccus (Horace), The Works of Horace (ed. C. Smart, Theodore Alois Buckley). Search the whole document.
Found 57 total hits in 19 results.
Libya (Libya) (search for this): book 2, poem 3
Egypt (Egypt) (search for this): book 2, poem 3
Canosa (Italy) (search for this): book 2, poem 3
Washington (United States) (search for this): book 2, poem 3
Tiber (Italy) (search for this): book 2, poem 3
Turbo (Colombia) (search for this): book 2, poem 3
Troy (Turkey) (search for this): book 2, poem 3
Horace (Ohio, United States) (search for this): book 2, poem 3
Damasippus, in a conversation with Horace,
proves this paradox of the Stoic philosophy, that most men are actually mad.
You write so seldom, as not to call for parchment four times in the year, busied in
reforming your writings, yet are you angry with yourself, that indulging in wine and sleep you
produce nothing worthy to be the subject of conversation. What will be the consequence? But
you took refuge here, it seems, at the very celebration of the Saturnalia, out of sobriety.
Dictate therefore something worthy of your promises: begin. There is nothing. The pens are
found fault with to no purpose, and the harmless wall, which must have been built under the
displeasure of gods and poets, suffers [to no end]. But you had the look of one that
threatened many and excellent things, when once your villa had received you, free from
employment, under its warm roof. To what purpose was it to stow Plato upon Menander? Eupolis,
Italy (Italy) (search for this): book 2, poem 3
Cicero (New York, United States) (search for this): book 2, poem 3